The
Criminal Justice System Levy:
“Why it matters to you”
By Jim
Raffenburg
Josephine County Commissioner
Josephine
County, OR - Why are your local elected leaders asking you
to vote for a Criminal Justice System levy when everyone in this county
knows levy requests don’t pass here?
Why?
Because the Federal Government has walked away from a century-old financial
obligation to timber counties throughout the West.
The
Forest Reserve Act of 1908 and the O&C Act of 1937 both require
the Federal Government to manage our forests for timber harvests and
revenue creation. The Forest Reserve Act of 1908 requires the Forest
Service to pay 25% of the net from those timber revenues to local counties.
The O&C Act is more specific, requiring that BLM management of the
O&C lands be primarily for timber harvests (and revenues) that are
“…for the economic benefit of the (O&C) counties…”
and provided that 50% of those revenues go to the counties.
For
all practical purposes, beginning in the early 1990’s, timber
harvesting stopped on those Federal lands and the shared revenues from
those timber sales, which provided the funding for the majority of county
government services, also stopped.
In
1994, Congress began compensating timber counties, for the Federal failure
to harvest timber, with legislation that funded “Safety-Net”
payments. Josephine County has used those safety net payments to pay
for vital county services, primarily our Criminal Justice System.
By
failing to honor their long established obligations, the United States
Congress has in effect cost-shifted federal expenses to local taxpayers.
I
know it’s wrong. You know it’s wrong, but no one in Washington,
D.C. is really listening to local voices anymore. To illustrate that
point, recently I was speaking with the State of Oregon’s chief
lobbyist in Washington, D.C. about the effort to reauthorize the Safety
Net payments, and she summed up the situation quite clearly, “It
no longer matters (in Washington) what we think or want in Oregon…”.
That is the harsh reality we all face.
Unless
Congress comes to its senses, and soon, the bitter, cold truth is that
we are on our own. If we want to continue to have the criminal justice
services those federal dollars used to pay for, the cost will have to
come out of our pockets directly, like it or not. I can’t say
it any more plainly than that.
Some
local residents are saying this levy request is nothing more than a
“scare tactic” by county government to convince you to pass
a property tax levy on May 15th. But telling the truth, all though it
might be very scary indeed, is not a scare tactic. It is just the truth.
Those folks spreading this idea are simply misinformed.
Let’s
be very clear about this levy request. It is for the replacement of
those lost federal revenues, not a request for extra money. Some of
those local folks who are opposed to this levy request are also telling
their friends that the real reason for the levy is so the Board of Commissioners
can fund other programs, like the library. As I said earlier, they are
just misinformed.
If
the levy passes, no money will be shifted to the library system because
there is no money to shift. On the contrary, if the levy fails, what
minimal property tax revenues the county receives today would need to
be shifted from the Library, Public Health and other existing services,
just to keep a skeleton criminal justice system in place.
In
this levy failure scenario, in addition to the lost Library, Public
Health, etc. services, the total available funds saved from all of those
other county programs, even when added to current property tax revenues,
would not be enough to provide the current levels of law enforcement
and prosecution we have today. Should the levy fail, here are a few
of the other things that will happen:
- The Juvenile
Justice system will close;
- Only the most
violent felonies would be prosecuted;
- There would
only be 30 jail beds available;
- One Sheriffs
patrol car would be on the road, for only 20 hours each day.
And
that’s the best case projection for next year. Providing even
that level of service would also require the County to spend the 5 million
dollars in reserves we have worked so hard to save these past two years.
The year after that, even these minimal service levels would be cut
again, by more than half, because the reserves would be gone.
Those
are the facts.
None
of us want to pay higher property taxes. We are already over-taxed by
anyone’s standards. Government today, in general, is too big and
needs to be reduced. It is taxing the life blood out of us all.
But
locally, reducing the size of government is exactly what your County
Commissioners have already done!
To
prepare for this massive revenue loss, Josephine County began preparing
two years ago. The County has reorganized the workforce, reducing the
number of public employees from nearly 700 two years ago, to just over
350 employees today. We have also significantly cut benefits to levels
that are more in line with the private sector. These changes have saved
nearly 5 million dollars in two short years.
The
goal of those recent (and future) changes is to allow the other, non-criminal
justice system services to continue to exist, at levels fundable from
current property taxes and fees.
Let
me repeat what I said earlier, “The criminal justice system has
never been funded by property taxes.” It has always been funded
with federal money, either timber receipts or safety-net revenues.
In
fact, even if every other county service was closed down, there would
not be enough current property tax revenue to even operate the jail
at current levels.
Over
the past six months, I have repeatedly been asked by citizens why the
County didn’t start making these cuts six or even ten years ago.
The County should have, but didn’t. This Commissioner has been
in office for 27 months, and I have done everything I could to cut costs.
Considering the scope of the problem I inherited, I think it is a near
miracle we have accomplished what we have. But the greater problems
we face cannot be solved at the local level. The real problems must
be addressed both in Salem and in Washington, D.C. If there is no political
will to solve them there, we can only react here.
The
O&C lands are not held in Federal ownership with the same mandates
as our national forest lands. Unlike National Forest lands, the O&C
lands exist primarily to be used for resource production of timber.
Congress must either relieve the O&C lands of the burden of judicial
review that apply to National Forest land management and allow them
to be managed for timber production first or they must act to permanently
compensate the affected counties with an alternative revenue source.
Failing
any Federal action to correct the problems they have caused, the Legislature
and Governor of the State of Oregon will then need to step up to the
plate and support the passage of new State legislation to correct the
uneven funding playing field local counties governments have to contend
with in Oregon. Otherwise, the financial situation will continue to
deteriorate at a local level.
In
closing, the issue facing all of us today is really quite simple. Will
there be meaningful law enforcement and criminal prosecution in Josephine
County or not?
If
the levy passes, the current level of criminal justice services will
continue. If voters turn down the levy, those services will not be there.
The result will have definite impacts to local citizens for years to
come, from quality of life issues to impacts on property values and
it will affect the ability of our community to attract new and better
jobs to the county.
The
Board of Commissioners promise: If by some stroke of luck the Federal
Government does come to it’s senses and restores the Safety Net
funding, the Board of Commissioners has promised not to collect the
tax money you approve under this levy, dollar for dollar, so you can
keep that money in your pocket. Officials from other counties have actually
chided us for making that promise, but not one of your current Commissioners
would have voted to put the levy request on the ballot without making
that promise to all of you. It was, and is, the right thing to do.
Finally,
when I asked you for your vote during my campaign for this Office, I
promised to tell you the truth, no matter what. I’ve just done
that. This is not a “scare tactic”, it is not a “bluff,”
it is simply the truth.
Regardless
of the election outcome, we will budget the money you give us wisely,
whether it includes this levy or not. We will provide the best level
of services that we can.
If
you vote yes on the levy, you vote to temporarily contain this massive
financial problem and let your elected leaders continue to work on the
long term solution.
If
you vote no, well….we’ll do everything we can and not complain
about it. But make no mistake about what it will mean. Things will change
and I don’t think many of us will like those changes.
It’s
your choice. Vote wisely. But make sure you vote.
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